The Potential of Liquid Biopsy in Detection of Endometrial Cancer Biomarkers: A Pilot Study

Author:

Kodada Dominik12,Hyblova Michaela1ORCID,Krumpolec Patrik1,Janostiakova Nikola12,Barath Peter1ORCID,Grendar Marian13,Blandova Gabriela2,Petrovic Oliver1,Janega Pavol12,Repiska Vanda2,Minarik Gabriel1

Affiliation:

1. Medirex Group Academy, 94905 Nitra, Slovakia

2. Faculty of Medicine, Comenius University in Bratislava, 84215 Bratislava, Slovakia

3. Jessenius Faculty of Medicine in Martin, Comenius University in Bratislava, 03601 Martin, Slovakia

Abstract

Endometrial cancer belongs to the most common gynecologic cancer types globally, with increasing incidence. There are numerous ways of classifying different cases. The most recent decade has brought advances in molecular classification, which show more accurate prognostic factors and the possibility of personalised adjuvant treatment. In addition, diagnostic approaches lag behind these advances, with methods causing patients discomfort while lacking the reproducibility of tissue sampling for biopsy. Minimally invasive liquid biopsies could therefore represent an alternative screening and diagnostic approach in patients with endometrial cancer. The method could potentially detect molecular changes in this cancer type and identify patients at early stages. In this pilot study, we tested such a detection method based on circulating tumour DNA isolated from the peripheral blood plasma of 21 Slovak endometrial cancer patients. We successfully detected oncomutations in the circulating DNA of every single patient, although the prognostic value of the detected mutations failed to offer certainty. Furthermore, we detected changes associated with clonal hematopoiesis, including DNMT3A mutations, which were present in the majority of circulating tumour DNA samples.

Funder

European Regional Development Fund

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis

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